Abstract

BackgroundVirtual surgery planning (VSP) is believed to reduce inaccuracies in maxillary positioning compared to conventional surgery planning (CSP) due to the elimination of face-bow transfer and laboratory steps. However, there is still a lack of comparative studies for the accuracy of splint-based maxillary positioning in CSP versus VSP. Therefore, the objective of this retrospective, observational study was to compare if splints produced by VSP and CSP reach postoperative outcomes within clinically acceptable limits.MethodsThe planned and actual postoperative results of 52 patients (VSP: n = 26; CSP: n = 26) with a mean age of 24.4 ± 6.2 years were investigated by three-dimensional (3D) alignment with planning software. The conventional treatment plan was digitized, so that the evaluation of both methods was performed in the same manner using the same coordinate system. Inaccuracies were measured by sagittal, vertical and transversal deviations of the upper central incisors and the inclination of the maxillary occlusal plane between the planned and achieved maxillary positions.ResultsBoth methods demonstrated significant differences between the planned and actual outcome. The highest inaccuracies were observed in vertical impaction and midline correction. No significant differences between CSP and VSP were observed in any dimension. Errors in vertical and sagittal dimension intensified each other.ConclusionsIn conclusion, splint-based surgeries reached similar results regardless of the applied planning method and splint production.

Highlights

  • Virtual surgery planning (VSP) is believed to reduce inaccuracies in maxillary positioning compared to conventional surgery planning (CSP) due to the elimination of face-bow transfer and laboratory steps

  • Quast et al Head & Face Medicine (2021) 17:27 laboratory steps in CSP is less based on splint manufacturing itself but more on the transfer of the patient’s individual inclination of the occlusal plane and the orientation of the plaster casts mounted on the articulator [7, 11]

  • The positive value of the mean difference (CSP: 1.4 mm; VSP: 2.1 mm) revealed that this discrepancy was caused by an undercorrection of the planned impactions

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Summary

Introduction

Virtual surgery planning (VSP) is believed to reduce inaccuracies in maxillary positioning compared to conventional surgery planning (CSP) due to the elimination of face-bow transfer and laboratory steps. Quast et al Head & Face Medicine (2021) 17:27 laboratory steps in CSP is less based on splint manufacturing itself but more on the transfer of the patient’s individual inclination of the occlusal plane and the orientation of the plaster casts mounted on the articulator [7, 11]. An angular discrepancy between the real and the mounted occlusal plane of 20° may lead to a vertical maxillary displacement of more than 3 mm during a planned sagittal forward movement of 10 mm [11]. This type of error is avoided in VSP

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